The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 4, 1894, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

CLARDY & CANTERBURY, The Hustlers Real Estate Business are Doing the OF BATES COUNTY. If you want to Buy or Sell see them. promptly attended to. First door South of Post Office West Side Square, Butler, Mo. COSTLY DISCOURTESY. Vanderbills Curt Reply to an Inyen- tor and What came ot It. {Baffalo Courter.) When Westinghouse first obtain | ed his patent on the air brake, like most inventors he was poor and friendless,and he found considerable | difficulty in inducing the railroads | to apply it to their cars. He man- aged to secure er introduction to Commodore Vanderbilt, who was} | never uoted for his gentle manners. Westinghouse found him engrossed | in his correspondence, aud he did not deign to stop reading his letters while the inventor extolled the mer | itsof bis devise. When he had} spoken his little piece, Vanderbilt; for the first time seemed to take | notice of him, and looking up sud denly said in his gruffest tones: | “What's that you say?” So Westinghouse commenced alt | over and explained how by an air | pressure of thirty pounds to the square foot the brake was applied | by the engineer, and when he finish- | ed he waited patiently for the dict. Once more the old commodore | raised his head long enough to jerk | out: “What's that you say about ait” Westinghouse told him. Looking him sternly in the the old man replied in freezing tone: “That will do, I have no time | to waste with a Discouraged, but not disheartened, | Westinghouse left, bring | ver: | face —— fool.” only later to} invention to the knowledge of the Pennsylvania rail- road authorities. At that time Tom | Scott was the president of the cor- | poration, and he at once saw the practicability of the invention and allowed some of his cars to be equip- ped with it. With that opening it was easy enough to get the other | roads to use the brake, Westinghouse’s fame ‘and fortune were made. When that time had arrived he one day received a letter from Commodore Vanderbilt, asking him‘ to call at the Central's office. Mr. Westinghouse’s reply was terse and to the point. He simply wrote: “I have no time to waste —— fool.” his great and with a Quantrell’s Watch Found. | Sedalia, Mo, Sept. 27 —A very in- | teresting relic has been found by | | James Hickman, a farmer near Lone | Jack, Johnson county. During the | | war the famous guerilla, Bill Quan- | | trell, lost a valuable gold watch in| Mr. Hickman’s field while passing through it on araid. He offered a} large reward for its recovery, but the watch was never feund until the | rains washed it to the surface a few days ago. ree | See the World’s Fair for 15 Cts. 4} Upon receipt ot your address and ft | teen cents in postage stamps, we will mail you prepaid our Souviner Portfolio of the World’s Columbian Exposition, the regular price is Flfty cents, but as/| we want you to have one, we make the / price nominal, You will find it a work | ot artanda thiug tobe prized. It con- | tains full page views of the great build- | ings, with description of same, and is | executed in the highest style or art. It | not satisfied with it, atter vou get it, we | will refund the stamps and let you keep | i the book. Address H. E. Bueklen, Chi cago, Il. Both Died Game. Paris, Ky., Sept. 28.—Tom Greene and Eugene Fulks, white men, were | know waat ought to be done and eae this afternoon for murders | committed in the Indian Territory. | The evidence was entirely circum- | | the grieving and succor the distress-| and all inflammation, after al! other: stantial conyincing. | been sent to the attorney to | where he now resides. | leges that Jackson often had deli | eat the bread of idleness. will scorn te wear what they have| death warrants were read at $:50 While the condemned men were he | ing preaared to beled to the gallows | a telegram was received from Wash ington — if Fulks was of un- sound mind. Private telegrams have that replied their right effect. Marshal Williams that both men were in | mind, and another dispatch was re- | ceived authorizing the execution to | proceed. The men were lead to the gallows at 2 oclock. Both were ; game to the last Fulks dying with curses on his lips. They both de , clined the services of a winister, cither in jail or on the scaffold The | trap was sprung at 2:05 and the | bodies cut down twenty later. minutes Both necks were broken. What About Corn? It is told of Col. Tracey, the re | publican nominee for congress, that | recently;-in the course of a speech at Malta Bend—a thriving town in the midst of the finest corn raising section of the state and where the ; crop this year will make from sixty to eighty bushels per acre—he said: “Gentlemen, two ago the | democrats had emblazoned on every wall, ‘Vote for Grover Cleveland and | get a dollar a buskel for your wheat!’ | Nowfyou are getting 40 cents.” Instantly a stalwart democrat ex- clamed: ‘What's the matter with The crowd went wild. The colonel didn’t have a word in reply. He years 45 cents per bushel for corn? to say ' recognized, too late, that he was in | the midst of a corn growing section and that wheat was of secondary consideration, and that if he cbary ed the democracy with bringius wheat down to 40 cents the crowd would credit the democrats with the increase in the price of co Seda- lia Democrat. Wants a Divorce. Memphis, Tenn., Sept. 27.—A bili for divorce was filed at Knoxville, Tenn., to day of more than general interest. Lola Small Jackson, daugh ter of the famous evangelist, Rev. husband, lute divorce and the custody of her child, now abeut 1 year old Upon James ia for atte the death of his father, two years} ago, the bill alleges, Jackson inher ited $30,000. While at Tate Spri an East Tennessee summer resort, | | he met the plaintiff in the summer of 1592, and on August 24 of that! year he married ber. They went to Knoxville to live immediately after, but Jacksou began to drink heavily, | was a frequenter of gambling houses ; and a spend thrift. Within two years from his marriage he had squander | jed all his money and the plaintiff} was forced to return to her parents, | while defendant went to Besides the charge of non-support, tke bill al- um tremens, and while in this eondi- tion often threatened to shooi his wife. Men wanted. Men who are hon est and pure. Men who are whole soue and truthful. Men who will! not be bribed Meu who are sound to the heart's cere. | wanted. Yes, men are! Men who are unwilling to} uot honestly paid for. Men who, will do it. Men who will give good) ; counsel, whe will sympathize with All business} Texas, | Men who} even fora friend. Men} fiesh has set in. more work and talk leas, men who do good to their friends to keep them: | | to their enemies to gain them; | believe in systematic giving and ad- | |vocate 1t. Men whose hearts are) j moved by the sadness of others,who | are touched by hunger and cold.| |bare feet. Yes, indeed, braye and tender, who ashamed to wipe tears men are are not Men) | whose acts will bring smiles to wan | aoe Men who hash lamentations | and are rewarded with sweet song j of thanksgiving away Jail Delivery at} Savannah | Savannah, Mo., Sept. 24.—There | was a jail delivery made last night | from the Andrew county jail at this | place. Two prisoners, all that were in the prison, escaped. One was! Linn Hayes, twice convicted of mur | der in the first degree, and whose | case has been taken to the Suprer court. He was to have been hung August 31. The other was a forger. | Harvey Simpson. They sawed oat} of their cells and through tne corri dor door. The sheriff and famil were out of the city and the jail w in charge of Deputy Sheriff Pete’ at the time. The priscners were uninterrupted in their work and were out several hours before their | escape was discovered. It is prob. able that they bad outside help. | The sheriff bas offered $200 reward | for their capture. | as { Funeral ot Prof. Ellis. Nevada, Mo., Sept. The body of the late Prof. G. T. Ellis, who| died yesterday at Texarkana, Tex., from a pistol shut wound at the hands of a G. L. Bryan, arrived here to day in charge of his brother and was taken to Osage Valley this coun- ty, for burial. The deceased aud his slayer were both prominent edu- cators having been associated togeth. er in Bryant's coliege at Sprague Mo, and lat+er at Texarkana. Re-| cently they disolved and Ellis started a rival institution. The difficulty that resulted in his death grew of that fact. out | | Jefferson City is to have 1 a $50,000} who | Omatis-F jwh | price of hogs is 100 per |foria took ch | purp Neff, but he was not in the building |_ Methodist Church as a result of the | late conference there The churches | of the state will help build it. State| | treasurer Lon V Stephens is a mem ber of the committee to devise a plan | for the work. | Restorative Wine. If your are weak and debiliated use Speers Port Grape Wine or his! Unfermented Grape Either | will purify your blood, Juice. restore di- gestion aud make you feel like a younger persen none but! Take | Speer’s. ‘Leadstools. Joplin, Mo., Sept. 26.—B. F. Cra- ither, a member of the Texas Charley | company died last night from having posnetae for . Evans, oue of the le: g pease of the city, made ali Pied From Eating [eee musbro jmistake last Sunday night aud His life despaired of for several bours rowly escaped death was | Nothing is shorter says au exchange jthau the populists platform. It is | promises and appriations Populists jare more“liberal with public j than any party money had. | They will promise every reform and | we have ever jare prepared to ask au appropria tion for everything from irrigation | ditches to sewing muchines. They | have already enough pledges out to tax every dollar of property in the }eountry in the treasury and put jevery acre of land up at tax sale. Washington D. C., Sept. 27.—) | Secretary Carlisle was to day ques- tioned as to his views of the wisdom of the Saratoga Convention yester- day in nominating Mr. Hill | Democratic candidate for Governor jof New York. The |clined to discusa for publication the }action of the Convention, but it is learned from his friends that the Secretary regards the ticket as a strong one—as strong eould have been ‘named, and it is his belief that it will be successful in November. is the Secretary de- Ballard’s Snow Liniment. 3 | This wonderful Liniment is known from the Atlanti> to the Pacific, and 'trom the lakes to the gulf. It is the | most penctrating liniment in the worl It willcure rheumatism, neuralgia, | sprai bruises, wounds, old burns, sciatica, sore thaoat, sore cuts, and heal all wounds where proud/ It is equally efficient} tor animals. Try it and you will not bel withoutit, Price soc. Seld by H Li Tucker Butler,Mo- ' | bitten off by jwas foun jed back where it belonged, | fused to bow or ring. A Complete and Comprehensive An McKinley, in his speech down in j Maine, asked ner the new tariff would start > new factory or revive t old o The Syra cuse Co by printing re one col thiaite 4 of ente es | which sumed business : it to McKinley where the got the cok. rivg prices nearly double commanded when the Re | publ went int o their bole with jout pull } had ima cent greate than it was when the party of re f urkets: feed answers the ontinues too valuable to Wheat and there is enough se bette of it both to fatten bogs on we ws und feed the people in St. Louis Re publie A Deteriu iued Woman o a burgiar — ul ol as cal Discovery is checks the frighttt ula, and, if taken mareh ef Pulmouary It cures in i ehrovie dart This also meme gr fever and ague, and fever, elulls |} dumb ague and lke diseases. Asthma cured by newly discover: ; ed treatwent. Address, for free pamphlet, testimouials and ences, World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y A Phils was a yeneral lelptia dispatch: resumption in the glass business iu South Jereey Mon- day. All the factorics went into| full blast. The coming season promises to be the best for years in the glass trade and the outlook for continued throughout the The work is be- very satisfactory Most of the factories have orders now on their books to work season is exe lent ing started on a basis to all run the at the year.” du a personal encounter at Lebi-| non on Tuesday P aster AL OW} Maysticld of that ple Yo bis ear} uy ung fat Vert lon the Ciarence sidewalk and sew- | t Vernou supported Mavtield in the post-office Maytield r service. and it is said y him for primary, + Saline cou-ty grand jury has Pe | re ds orted an indictment against the} vy. A M Cockrell, a Baptist min- aie of illegally solemnizing a marnage} at that place between George Van Arsdall and Miss Cozette Martin j4 July 18 mes Goodier, an old practie- »f Monroe cx sday at Mon unty died roe City of can the stomach age 59. The Si » and Iron | ¢ tu sday tothe Saxton National Bank, giving a deed of trust for $31,950 said to be over $100,000. The assets are If you have not yet procured { celebrity in caring | refer | » There | ner naned | Half of his ear} ‘ BUTLER, | | | | | Nature's of Arrow Rock upon the charge | b case openers, ryour jeweler, or send a They ate furnish- liree by the Keystone watch e and makes all kinds the low priced nicke! pensive solid gold. cialty is the Jas. of cases from to themost ex Its great company. Besides making a haud- jsome charu xy your chain, they gave your ger nals i kuife blades. The Keystone compauy is ithe largest of its kind in the world, | spe- Boss filled cause. Jas. Boss invented and made the first. filled case in 1859 and many of the! cases then made aud worn since are Later the Boss patents passed into the hands of the Key- still intact stone watch company which has the! sole right to wake these cases. Boss cases are known to all jewelers as the standard after which all filled cases are patterned. All stone cases, inciuded, have the far-famed Non-pull out It is the oniy bow that is securely fastened to the case and can only be had on cases made| Keystone Boss cases of the watch by theft and injury by| dropping. These cases are handled by all jewelers as the company does | [not x etail. Several 8 ed. Men whe will scorn to do aj avetailed. It will cure barbed wire|by this company. It prevents losa|takes subscriptions to the Butler, tempts were made to have them re-| base thing, prieved. The hanging was to have who know how to obey before they taken place this morning. The/attempt to command. Men who do | | 5 SECRET. “SINCE | USED My Clothes are whiter,my Health better. my Labor fess’ BEST, PUREST & Most ECONOMICAL SOLD EVERYWHERE “x THENK FAIRBANK COMPANY, StLovis. G. B. HICKMAN, Seen - Bates Co. Elevator Co. INCORPORATED.) R. J HURLEY, PsELIDENT. Missouri. DEALERS IN ‘Grain,Seeds,Flour, Feed and Farm Implements. Branch House at FOSTER and SPRAGUE. ta" Flax Seed to Loan to Farmers. ~*A HAND SAW IS A GOOD THING, BUT NOT TO SHAVE WITH.” SAPOLIO IS THE PROPER THING FOR HOUSE-CLEANING. NHOOD RESTOREDISPErEfcrere.; M ‘This wonderful remedy uaraniced to urea. inert ous diseases.such as Weak Memory. Lossof Brain rower, Headache, Wake(ulness, 11 Nightly Emissions, Nervous- ners,ail drains and lo erative Organs of elther sex caused by overexertion, youth: excessive use of tobacco, optum or stim- ulants, which lead to Infirmity, C in be carried in vest pocket. $1 per box, 6 for n quarantec to ey. Bold by forit, take no Si Write for free Media att Book sent sealer Pi ED CO., Masonic Tempie, CHICAGO, Fursale in Butler, Mo., by J. H. F Mrish L, Druggist. —ELY’S CREAM Cleanses the Nasal Passages, Allays Pa este rnnensmennie Heals res, Restores Taste and Smell, Cures It ts yen Absorbed ny mail f “ELY BROS,,.66 Warren St, NY. (Sumer CB LEWIS & CO. Manpbrak ( LwerPues yap Horn Stables Remepy sa ace Com PLAINT AUCTIONEER. Proprietor of ya n PETER EWING. "Py dete DrKi Having purchased the Elk Horn barn and Livery o t ot J. WSmith, and g added to the same a number ot ss Buggies, and horses, I can say to the public that I now have the Best Liverv Barn Nasa ties Fatarth In southwest Mo. Horses and mules sold, or stock handled on S. W. Cor. 9th and Main Streets, Stock bearded by the day week or month, fence Mr 1 any L Call ard se With 16 years exper- wis teels able to compete rnin this section, CB LEWIS & CO “Junction.” Dr. Kimberlin will visit Butler the Third Saturday of every mouth. Office, Day House. - AWWEST = RATES ‘sits Direct Lines Fast Time clegant Pullman Service Reclining Chair Cars ( To Call and Settle, Having sold my store building, I desire to close out my stock of goods by September 15th. Also all persons knowing themselves indebted to me i j { are requested to call and settle their {&_— accounts without delay. jt=s s iS t i j WANTED—CHICKENS & EGGS. KANSAS CITY De drop in and see N. M. Nestie- CHICAGO ano tHe rode at Virginia, Mo. He will give you the highest market price for chickens, eggs and hides. Also ft Ties Marest Prest for particalar: ASK Sec thas your ticket reads via the poplar 4 “Missouri Pacific Ry.” H. C. TOWNSEND, | [Genesal Passenger and Ticket Agent, ST. LOUIS. fe Weekly Traces, at $1.00 per year and as agent is authorized to collect and) receipt for the paper. Natsoxt M. Nestixzzop. | i

Other pages from this issue: